Share this Article

In spite of Airbnb's very public, very expensive battle against the new rules, last week Governor Cuomo signed new legislation making it illegal to advertise an apartment for less than 30 days on the short-term rental platform, the New York Times reports. The new legislation is an extension of laws that have been on the books since 2010 banning short-term rentals in apartment buildings with three or more units, but creates a way for officials to directly prosecute the hosts themselves.

With fines that could run as much as $7,500, Assemblywoman Linda B. Rosenthal called the legislation "a bold step that will hopefully set a standard for the rest of the country and other countries in the world struggling with the impact of Airbnb on affordable housing." Naturally, Airbnb has already filed a lawsuit against New York State, saying the legislation would cause "irreparable harm" and citing the new rules against advertising as a free speech issue, among other things. For the time being, the state has agreed not to enforce the new regulations until the lawsuit is resolved.

But looking ahead, New Yorkers face a more pressing question: once the rules are enforced, how will the city go about this?

As Gothamist points out, the crackdown on hosts falls under the jurisdiction of the Mayor's Office of Special Enforcement, which issues fines on a "complaint-only basis," and won't be poring through listings to find violations. If no one reports a given listing—or if it doesn't overtly specify that it's available for periods of under 30 days, with the host off-site—plenty of wayward listings could still slip through the cracks.

As before, residents can call 311 to report illegal hotel activity in their buildings, and Melissa Grace from the Mayor's Press Office tells us via email that once the legal dispute with Airbnb has cleared, "We are taking the steps necessary to enforce the law. We take on operators of illegal hotels who put people in unsafe conditions and displace affordable homes. We will continue to apply our laws, including this one, to hold bad actors accountable."

Topics:

Brick Underground articles occasionally include the expertise of, or information about, advertising partners when relevant to the story. We will never promote an advertiser's product without making the relationship clear to our readers.